Alton Evening Telegraph from Alton, Illinois · Page 4

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ALTON
EVENING
TELEGRAPtf
WEtJNES&AY*
JULY
10,1963
Editorial
2
New
Strokes
Against
Crime
Sometimes
you
have
to
advance
one
step
at
a
time.
The
Illinois
legislature's
just
closed
session
adopted
a
bill
that
would
outlaw
pinball
machine*
containing
metered
multiple
replay
devices
which
make
it
possible
to
accumulate
points
for
an
over-the-counter
payoff.
A
court
decision
some
years
ago
ruled
these
legal,
since
they
did
not
make
a
direct
payoff.
The
legislature's
action
was
long
in
coming.
It
should
have
been
taken
immediately
after
'completion
of
the
Illinois
Supreme
Court's
ruling.
At
any
rate,
it's
done
now
arid
since
Governor
Kerner
signed
it
Tuesday,
goes
some
distance
to
back
up
a
bill
he
approved
during
the
legislative
season,
establishing
a
state-wide
anti-crime
commission.
The
bill
contains
one
flaw
—
which
may
Dnvhl
Lawrence
Threat
Hits
Innocent
Bystanders
*/
WASHINGTON
—
Thr
nation
that
wasn't
good
for
Illinois,
also
decided
it
Uvas
this
week
tjivon
a
painful
ex
THE
LITTLI
WOMAN
be
remedied
later
when
the
foollurdiness
and
unfairness
of
it
becomes
more
evident.
The
legislature,
while
deciding
this
type
of
machine
spread
.1
kind
of
gambling
disease
would
throw
some
workers
out
ot
jobs.
So
ii
injected
a
provision
permitting
continuation
of
manufacturing
the
devices.
Now
we
suppose
authorities
will
have
to
guard
against
smuggling
rings
slipping
the
for
sneak
operations.
Chances
arc
the
outlawing
of
the
machines
wouldn't
throw
any
more
men
out
of
change
1
,
in
operations
of
our
local
oil
refineries
over
the
past
five
years.
Yet
no
attempts
have
been
made
to
outlaw
these
changes
—
and
none
will
be.
Test
That
Needs
to
Be
Made
that
legislation
needed
to
spell
out
a
remedy-
tor
this
problem
could
have
been
introduced
and
passed
easily
in
the
General
Assembly
session
just
closed.
There
was
plenty
of
time
Perhaps
after
tonight
the
chips
will
be
down
with
regard
to
Mayor
P.
\V.
Day's
liquor
commission
salary
of
$100
a
month.
If
the
City
Council
upholds
its
corporation
counselor,
it
will
be
up
to
whatever
citizens
are
interested
to
contest
the
matter
in
the
courts.
And
that's
about
the
only
way
to
learn
what
the
law
is
—
though
it
may
cost
the
city
a
few
pennies
in
the
process.
An
opinion
from
the
attorney
general
of
the
state
could
do
little
-more
good
in
this
case
than
that
from
the
corporation
counselor.
Counselor
J.
W.
Hoefert
told
the
council's
finance
committee
Monday
night
there
were
no
court
rulings
on
the
problem.
The
question
arose
out
of
a
situation
rather
unusual
in
Illinois.
Though
statutes
ban
changes
of
mayor's
salaries
%vhile
they
are
serving
their
terms,
they
apparently
don't
provide
against
adding
greatly
to
their
responsibilities.
And
in
this
case,
Mayor
Day's
workload
has
increased
manifold
at
midterm
by
a
change
from
council-manager
to
aldermanic
form
of
government
—
a
change
he
didn't
ask
for
and
which
he
outspokenly
opposed.
The
mayor
had
proposed
an
administrative
assistant
of
professional
status,
but
this,
too,
was
ruled
out
early
by
the
council.
While
avoiding
a
direct
breach
of
the
ban
against
changing
his
salary,
as
such,
the
council
agreed
to
boost
-his
income
as
liquor
commissioner
—.
a
responsibility
automatically
attached
to
his
post
as
mayor.
His
income
still
is
not
comparable
with
that
of
the
manager
whose
responsibilities
Mr.
Day
nm>t
assume.
It
is
not
beyond
the
realm
of
possibility
nmplr
of
what
could
happen
to
"innocent
bystanders."
Even
thr
inert
1
threat
of
a
country-wide
railroad
strike
caused
many
a
business
to
begin
expensive
preparations
to
enable
commerce
to
machines
shipped
out
of
tiic
state
back
in
—
|continue
to
flow.
Five
labor
unions,
each
nationally
organized,
may
today
use
their
monopoly
power
over
the
whole
industry
to
shut
off
rail
traffic
and
thereby
work
statewide
than
have
been
eliminated
by
demoralize
passenger
and
freight
service
from
roast
to
coast.
The
railroad
companies
themselves,
however,
cannot
function
as
a
private
monopoly.
Two
companies
are
not
allowed
to
merge,
even
when
one
is
on
the
verge
of
bankruptcy,
unless
permission
granted
by
a
federal
government
agency.
Yet
one
railroad
union
doesn't
require
the
slightest
authority
from
the
government
to
close
down
the
industry
and
impair'
the
investments
of
millions
of
individual
or
institutional
stockholders.
Property
thus
can
be
destroyed
at
will
by
a
private
monopoly
of
union
members.
Plainly,
the
sentiment
so
often
expressed
in
dilemmas
of
this
kind
that
"there
ought
to
be
a
law"
is
ignored
in
Congress
and
by
the
President.
For
to
do
anything
to
antagonize
labor
is
considered
politically
dangerous.
This
is
because
all
unions
join
in
a
!
political
campaign
against
any
administration
that
refuses
to
do
their
bidding.
The
issues
in
the
current
controversy
between
the
railroad
unions
and
the
companies
have
been
thoroughly
debated
and
have
been
argued
in
collective-bargaining
conferences
for
four
years.
In
fact.
President
Eisenhower
appointed
a
commission
which
reported
to
President
Kennedy
on
Feb.
28,
1962.
after
an
exhaustive
review
of
so-called
"featherbedding"
—
an
insistence
on
being
|
paid
for
work
not
done.
The
commission
declared
in
its
recommendations
that
the
railroads
could
make
sweeping
changes
in
the
work
rules
and
in
the
number
of
workers
employed.
It
pro-
j
posed,
at
the
same
time,
some
curbs
on
railroad
action,
including
certain
tilings
the
companies
would
have
to
do
in
the
way
of
benefits
for
workers
who
were
for
it.
and
local
officials
certainly
realized
what
the
situation
was.
N'ow
the
intertwining
of
existing
laws
must
be
sorted
out
and
untwisted
into
greater
clarity
through
the
courts
—
if
anyone
is
interested.
And
we
assume
someone
is,
-unce
the
Alton
Citizens
for
Better
Government
has
kept
the
question
prominent
for
the
last
three
weeks.
No
Question
Here
No
matter
what
you
may
think
about
other
phases
of
Negro
demands
for
civil
liberties,
you'd
certainly
be
in
the
minority
of
Northerners
if
you't
deny
him
the
right
to
vote.
There
will
be
little
sympathy
up
here,
and
little
self-searching
over
the
controversy
involving
the
right
of
the
ballot,
for
which
Negroes
in
Mississippi
now
are
preparing
to
demonstrate
once
more.
Those
in
Mississippi
who
had
decided
three
weeks
ago
to
ease
their
demonstrations
and
concentrate
on
vote
registration
have
reported
the
books
suddenly
closed
to
them.
The
Hinds
County
Circuit
Clerk
explained
preparations
for
the
Aug.
6
Democratic
primary
had
so
busied
his
office
that
he
had
to
suspend
registrations.
In
view
of
the
situation,
we'd
suggest
he
get
the
extra
help
needed
—
this
time,
anyway
—
and
resume
accommodating
the
folks
long
denied
this
privilege
and
overdue
for
it.
'"When
I
start
something,
I
finish
it"
Readers
Fornni
Home
Troubles
First
With
thr
Fourth
of
July
.just
}
problem
in
the
minds
of
many
to
past
there
appears
to
be
a
re-i
the
U.S.A.
Britain,
and
some
of
dedication
in
some
quarters
to!the
other
allies
in
NATO,
the
basic
principles
of
freedom
in'
It
is
claimed
that
some
of
these
a
freedom-loving
nation.
To
the
i
so-called
allies
have
slackened
basic
principles
of
liberty
and
i
ou
their
military
forces.
We
here
freedom
as
ordained
and
estab-
i
in
America
do
not
appear
to
have
lished
by
the
founding
fathers
of
j
all
*the
answers.
De
Gaulle
ap-
the
Republic.
i
pears
to
stand
well
at
home.
His
As
many
of
us
review
the
in-;course
definitely
smacks
of
iso-
stant
world
situation
—
the
pre-1
lationism.
sent-day
trend
of
men
and
affairs
We
have
become
exponents
of
—it
would
appear
that
it
is
about
time
some
of
us
become
more
foreign
travels,
have
tried
to
bolster
and
strengthen
the
government
seriously
concerned
and
interest-1
of
Italy
against
the
Communist
eel
in
solving
some
of
the
more
I
m
e
n
a
c
e.
We
concern
ourselves
important
crisis
and
problems
in
i
with
a
bankrupt
Germany,
a
lot-
tlie
nation.
!
tering
scandal-ridden
British
gov-
It
has
been
written
that
many
j
ernmerit,
and
we
still
do
not
hesi-
wars
have
been
based
on
eco-jlate
to
encourage
the
spending
of
nomic
problems,
often
the
main
>
$4
billion
to
put
a
man
on
the
problem.
Many
are
presently
con-
j
nioon.
cerned
in
or
have
been
giving
ear-
j
We
have
not
done
too
well
in
nest
thought
and
attention
to
one
j
some
of
our
past
foreign
travels.
Charles
De
Gaulle,
who.
it
ap-j
Let's
rededicate
ourselves
to
the
pears,
has
shattered,
so
to
speak,
j
solution
of
some
of
our
all-import-
economic
unity
among
the
west-
•
ant
social-economic
and
political
ern
powers.
.
•
problems.
There
presently
exists
the.
common
market
situation
—
a
vital
23
ami
50
Years
Ago
July
10,
193S
\Yardel)
Vaughn,
24,
Edwardsviile,
became
Ihn
area's
first
drowning
victim,
despite
efforts
of
five
friends
to
rescue
him.
The
pavty
was
swimming
In
Hop
Hollow's
abandoned
stone
quarry
pool
when
Vaughn
went
under.
Clarence
Stahl.
among
Upper
Alton
persons
who
witnessed
the
tragedy,
joined
in
the
search
for
Vaughn's
body.
James
Stalcup
bicycled
to
Alton
Water
Co.
pumping
station
to
notify
police.
Perry
Hartwtck.
64,
suffered
a
left
hip
Iran-
lure
w^ieti
a
load
of
hay
oil
Which
he
was
riding
at
the
home
of
his
son-in-law
and
daughter,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
Wankel,
near
Fosterburg,
overturned.
Struck
by
an
automobile
after
leaving
a
bus
on
East
Broadway,
at
'Shields
street,
Henry
Hussman,
71,
Alton
constable,
suffered
a
fractured
right
leg,
and
other
injuries.
Miss
Audrey
Reardon,
16,
of
Union
street,
was
injured
in
an
automobile
crash
two
hours
after
returning
from
a
600-mile
trip
to
Newcastle,
Ind.
Probate
Judge
C.
\V.
Burton
entered
the
race
for
the
county's
state's
attorney's
post,
pledging
vigorous
support
of
better
law
enforcement
in
the
county.
The
season's
hottest
day
showed
a
temperature
of
D6
degrees.
'
Fred
Bray,
Jr.,
7,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bray
of
Lawton
avenue,
suffered
a
serious
head
injury
when
struck
by
a
ball
bat
that
slipped
from
the
hand
of
the
batter.
Clyde
L.
Miller,
43,
was
moved
to
St.
Joseph's
Hospital
for
treatment
of
heat
prostration.
He
was
the
third
such
victim
of
the
season.
Miss
Lillian
Thornton
of
Ml.
Vernon,
granddaughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
D.
M.
Kitzmiller,
had
been
awarded
a
Shurtleff
College
scholarship.
Her
great-grandfather,
the
Rev.
M.
V.
Kitzmiller
of
Girard.
had
donated
his
library
to
the
school.
Albert
Arnold
'of
Carlinville
was
the
ace
technician
on
the
movie
set
where
Myrna
Loy
and
Clark
Gable
were
making
"Too
Hot
to
Handle,"
under
Director
W.
S.
Van
Dyke.
,
Robert
C.
Moore
of
Carlinville
resigned
after
23
years
as
secretary
of
the
Illinois
Education
Association.
Mrs.
Henry
Dossett,
56,
of
East
Alton
died
'of
a
heart
attack
at
her
home.
July
Alton
naval
reserves
on
the
Sir.
Illinois
arrived
back
in
Alton
after
the
upstream
leg
of
their
training
cruise
on
which
they
went
as
tor
ns
Poorln.
Adjutant
General
Frnnk
Dlckson
and
Stale
Senator
Ed
Bcall
were
to
board
the
steamboat
here
and
continue
with
the
mlllHttltlen
on
their
downstream
cruise.
The
militiamen
were
kept
oil
the
boat
here
until
n
smallpox
scare
was
disposed
of.
One
of
the
enlisted
men,
thorn-
as
CaWwell,
had
broken
out
\vUh
ft
skin
eruption.
Dr.
D.
F.
Dtiggan,
local
representative
of
the
State
Health
Department,
was
called
to
make
a
diagnosis.
"Jusl
prickly
heat"
was
Ills
finding.
C.
F.
Yeakel,
auto
dealer,
received
another
carload
of
Studebakers
and
made
delivery
of
oars
to
Bert
Elfgen,
Eben
Rodgers,
and
Mrs.
M.
J.
Merrill.
A
floating
body
recovered
from
the
river
here
by
Capt.
W.
D.
Fluent
was
Identified
as
that
of
Felix
Mosby,
missing
almost
a
month
from
(lie
Webb
dock.
The
body,
102nd
recovered
by
Fluent
over
a
20-year
period,
had
been
churned
up
in
the
harbor
by
passage
of
the
Str.
Alton.
Dr.
Charles
Kennedy,
who
came
here
to
establish
a
school
of
chiropractic,
had
purchased
a
cabin
cruiser
from
C.
F.
Sparks.
He
was
a
son
of
theMarquis
of
Ailsa
(Scotland)
and
was
a
former
British
army
officer
and
veteran
of
service
in
the
Boer
War.
Dr.
Kennedy
Was
planning
a
cruise
to
Keokuk.
City
Treasurer
Frank
P.
Bauer
in
a
formal
statement
to
City
Council
denied
its
right'to
order
city
funds
placed
in
the
highest
bidding
bank
after
he
had
already
taken
office
and
given,
a
$1
million
bond
for
their
safekeeping.
The
council
referred
the
matter
to
its
corporation
counsel.
The
school
board
requested
a
tax-
levy
of
$100,000
for
school
.purposes.
Best
yield
of
wheat
reported
to
date
in
Madison
County
was,
on
a
12-acre
field
in
the
Harvey
Doraey
farm
hear
Moro
which
produced
41
bushels
an
acre.
Mrs.
David
Seigel
of
209
W.
7th
St.
incurred
bruises
in
a
full
when
alighting
from
a
street
Alton
Gas
&
Electric
Co.
was
to
install
lights
in
Rock
Spring
Park
for
the
park
commission
at
a
monthly
rate
of
$4
a
light.
ALVIN
C.
BOI-LM
Edwardsville
WASHINGTON
President
Forget
your
Troubles
Do
you
ever
get
fed
up
with
youngsters
were
quiet
and
well-
j
Ceasing
^embfaTice
tcT
Dr.'
The
Allen-Scott
Report
Jekyll-and-Hyde
Cuban
Policy
the
toil
and
grind,
and
the
petty
Kennedy's
Cuban
policy
has
an
behaved.
bickerings
and
squabbles
of
t
h
e
i
f
am
tone
deaf,
but
I
can
ap-
human
race,
during
everyday!
predate
the
soothing
power
of
a
life'
'well-played
composition
or
the
SrT-
su^i
aT^aiiceVyTl
After
a
hard
day
at
the
plantjarring
rhythm
of
a
™^
And
Kell
on
Beat
Ears
.
.
f
tadividual
Drew
Pearson's
Merry-Go-Rouiid
Have
Territorial
Problems,
Too
The
report
fell
on
cleat
ears
as
a
non-operating
union
on
the
Chicago
&
Northwestern
Railroad
jwenl
out
on
a
strike
that
lasted
|
from
Aug.
30
to'
Sept.
12,
1962.
It
received
financial
help
from
outside
unions
which,
to
be
sure,
re!
fused
to
cross
picket
lines.
Fin-
!with
a
TV
or
radio
program,
then;'*
«™
not},
there's
the
breathtak-
be
housed.
At
any
rate,
this
part
of
North-j
international
settlements,
east
Siberia,
plus
restless
Sinki-
Chijiiiir
Helps
Coinniu:
ang
province
where
Nomad
tribes
Editor's
Note
—
Probably
in
no
American
newspaperman
has
acquired
such
a
background
regarding
the
debate
between
China
and
Russia
as
Drew
Pearson.
As
early
as
1925,
Pearson
went
to
China
and
reported
on
the
first
Soviet
attempts
to
communize
China.
Earlier,
in
1922,
he
visited
Siberia.
He
had
also
crossed
the
Gobi
to
Mongolia,
also
reached
the
edge
of
Tibel,
and
more
recently
has
interviewed
most
of
the
top
leaders
of
the
Communist
world.
Today
Pearson
begins
a
series
of
columns
on
Uie
battle
between
the
giants
of
Communism
and
what
it
means
to
the
American
people.
WASHINGTON
—
There
are
two
basic
issues
in
dispute
between
the
two
giants
of
Communism,
the
first
being
territory
and
I
he
tremendous
population
bulge
of
Red
China;
the
second
being
whether
the
Communist
world
can
co-exist
beside
t
h
e
Capitalist
world
and
still
survive,
The
second
difference
has
been
so
headlined
that
the
public
is
inclined
to
forget
the
first,
but
it
remains
a
fact
lhat
Russia
under
the
Czar
scratched
aboul
5,500,000
square
miles
of
Chinese
territory,
and
the
Chinese
of
late
have
been
making
noices
about
wanting
it
back.
1
have
traveled
up
the
Amur
river
through
the
area
which
the
Czar's
army
snatched.
It
is
flat,
rich,
largely
uncultivated
and
resembles
the
rolling
prairies
of
Montana.
It
is
traversed
by
one
of
the
longest
rivers
in
Ihe
world,
the
Amur,
up
which
I
sailed
for
a
week
before
coming
to
one
of
the
cenlral
cities
of
the
Siberian
maritime
provinces,
Khabarovsk,
which
used
to
be
Chinese.
These
maritime
provinces,
all
formerly
Chinese,
extend
down
Ihe
coasl
of
Siberia
from
t
h
e
mouth
of
Ihe
Amur
river
to
Man
churia
and
west
as
far
as
Lake
Baikal.
According
to
the
latest
Soviet
census,
they
have
a
population
of
8,700,000.
But
with
the
intensive
cultivation
and
low
standard
oi
living
of
the
Chinese,
they
could
probably
support
ten
times
as
much.
At
any
rate,
the
Chinese
government
last
winter
nudged
Moscow
regarding
this
vast
area
and
made
it
clear
that
it
reserved
the
right
to
reopen
previous
treaties
and
get
the
territory
back.
perhaps
anticipating
this
Khrushchev
has
been
driving
tor
more
RuwAao
migration
In
the
area.
When
J
telfced
to
him
on
the
shores
o|
the
Iteefc
Sea,
he
told
the
field."
he
to.d
Molotov
when
maneuvering
to
play
the
Russiansj*"^
the
latter
asked
how
the
farm
pioneers
of
Siberia
were
going
to
JltCllJCUV
CI
111=
l\J
IJlCiy
IHC
H.U001QMO
j
11.
off
against
the
British,
Americans
com
P""
v
responded
to
an
a
and
Japanese
who
then
lived
on
the
fat
of
the
land
in
their
own
roam
back
and
forth
across
the
border,
have
caused
serious
friction
between
the
two
giants
of
the
Communist
world.
Independent
Mongolia
Another
cause
of
smouldering
friction
is
Mongolia,
a
semi
desert
area
claimed
by
the
Chinese
for
Chiang
Helps
Communists
Chiang
Kai-Shek,
now
the
archenemy
of
Chinese
Communism,
was
one
of
those
then
flu-ting
with
the
Russians;
in
fact
he
had
or-
from
the
President
and
agreed
to
arbitration.
The
battle
that
lias
been
going
;olten
disgusted
and
turned
t
h
e
ing
view
of
the
river,
with
its
traf-
|jekyll
and
Mr.
Hyde.
W
h
i
1
e
State
Department
"spokesman"
are
publicly
pro-
el
a
i
m
i
n
g
the
administration's
firm
intention
to
continue
lo
isolate
the
Red-ruled
island,
Die
President's
inner
council
of
poll-
thing
off?
H
a
v
e
you
ever
g
fie,
the
setting
sun
on
the
waters,
one
for
a
and
tar
below,
the
miniatuve-ap-
01)
involves
a
jockeying
by
.hej^ockeyec1
world
leisurely
after-dinner
drive
and
Bearing
cars
on
McAdams
High-
come
home
half
scared
to
death
I
way.
by
screeching
tires,
blaring
horns
j
There
is
always
a
cool
breeze,
and
wild-eyed
motorists,
passing
and
no
mosquitoes
every
one
on
the
road?
i
For
an
hour
or
In
short,
do
you
ever
yearn
for
1
forget
what
it
was
that
was
both-
a
quiet,
peaceful
evening
once
inlering
you.
a
while,
a
chance
to
get
away'
1
am
not
acquainted
with
any
from
the
maddening
throng
and;member
of
the
band.
But
I
am
For
an
hour
or
two,
you
can
union
leaders.
They
don't
like
proposals
for
compulsory
arbitration
and
in
emergencies
prefer
seizure
and
operation
of
the
rail-
sure
they
all
put
far
more
into
Then
I
"suggest
you
take
in
a
''•
their
work
than
they
get
out
of
it
band
concert
at
Riverview
Park
<
financially.
Thursday.
For
the
one
I
attended,
|
It's
a
shame
that
money
ap-
every
bench
was
filled,
and
the
|
propriated
for
a
new
bandstand
ganiz;iite~Whampo"cader
s
"un-!
roads
b
-
v
,
the
government
while
6
*
some
settlement
is
worked
out.
The
President
today
has
no
several
thousand
years
but
now
der
Russian
Military
Adviser
Borodin,
and
controlled
all
ship-
up
the
Pearl
River
from
Kong
to
Canton.
power
to
seize
the
railroads.
Con-
was
considered
so
pro-Communist
Chiang
S
)>ess
would
have
to
provide
it.
The
same
situation
arose
in
1948
11
uiuu^iu
^«>
uu
t
..»«
the
American
Consul
warned
dependent
republic
leaning!
an
in
toward
Moscow.
It
was
around
1925
thai
the
me
not
lo
take
the
trip.
when
President
Truman,
believing
that
he
already
had
authority
JlUl
IW
ldI\C
U»C
Ii
il/.
.
.j.tl.lT
turned
out
to
be
uneventful
under
a
wartime
statute
that
had
yet
been
repealed,
seized
the
one
was
to
undercut
the
British,
American
and
Japanese
influence
in
China
by
planting
the
seeds
of
Communism.
The
other
was
to
woo
some
of
the
borderline
territory
away
from
China
—
chiefly
Mongolia.
When
I
crossed
the
Gobi
Desert
in
1925
to
see
how
far
the
Soviet
concerned.
But
in
Canton
I
got
the
first
real
taste
of
Chinese
Communism.
It
took
the
form
of
a
boycott
against
the
American,
British,
French
and
Japanese
in-
lernational
settlement
thai
was
so
tight
that
no
food
could
be
purchased,
no
water
was
supplied,
jno
servants
were
available
and
grass
grew
in
the
streets
of
the
,
.
..
„
.
,
once
Ihriving
colony,
had
penetrated
m
its
effort
to
;
Fm
,
more
e£fective
^
U)e
Rus
.
j
eommunize
China,
1
had
to
travel
^
in
a
car
owned
by
the
Soviet
Co-j
operative,
Amtorg.
Even
that
early,
the
Soviet
controlled
all
lines
of
communication
with
outer
Mong
o
1
i
a,
an
area
once
considered
aart
of
China.
En
route,
we
passed
a
caravan
of
Buicks,
heavy
with
ammuni-
operaled
under
government
auspices.
But
the
unions
refused
to
work.
The
President
then
asked
Congress
for
further
legislation
to
require
compulsory
service
through
the
military
draft.
The
strike
was
called
off
after
it
had
lasted
48
hours.
Mr.
Truman's
bill,
however,
passed
the
House
and
was
subsequently
amended
and
passed
by
the
Senate,
too,
but
"
ooards.
The
pictures
1
snapped
of
these
gun-runners
were
the
first
concrete
evidence
the
U.S.
military
attache
in
Peking
had
re-
^
^'.'
ceived
of
Soviet
military
penetra-
'
v(uiiv
'
lion
into
China.
The
Chinese,
however,
w
ere
smart.
They
took
Russian
military
help
and
they
kow-towed
to
bearded
Russian
Ambassador
Karahan
in
Peking.
But
actually
they
were
me
in
gome
detail
how
he
had
overcome
about
"Lit
the
itov'B
skepticism
rn
Siberia,
drivers
sleep
ion
and
with
Russian
rifles
strap-
this
airtight
Chinese
boycott
was
the
forerunner
of
the
tough
Communism
which
was
to
begin
taking
over
China
in
a
few
years.
In
the
Chinese
section
of
Canton
I
went
around
to
Communist
headquarters.
The
atmosphere
was
icy.
Communist
leaders
were
ped
in
boxes
on
their
running,
not
talking
to
a
western
newsman.
They
only
handed
out
literature.
China
for
the
Chinese,
the
expulsion
of
the
white
man
and
the
foreigner,
Marx.
Significantly
there
was
no
Alton
Evening
Telegraph
Published
Dally
by
Alton
Telegraph
Printing
Company
p.
B.
COUSLEY.
Publisher
PAUL
S.
COUSLEY.
Editor
Subscription
price
-10c
weekly
by
carrier;
by
mall
$12
a
year
In
Illinois
und
Missouri,
$18
In
all
other
states.
Mall
subscriptions
not
accepted
In
towns
where
carrier
delivery
Is
available.
MEMBER
OF
THE
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
The
Associated
Press
Ii
exclusively
entitled
to
the
use
for
publication
of
all
news
dispatches
credited
In
ihla
R
aper
and
to
the
local
news
pub-
shed
herein.
MEMBER,
THE
AUDIT
BUREAU
OF
CIRCULATION
Local
Advertising
Rales
and
Contract
Information
on
application
at
the
Telegraph-business
office,
ill
East
Broadway,
Alton,
lit,
National
Advertising
$Jpresentatlves:
The
Uranlmm
Company.
New
York,
*
Tit
111
t
Mi
UiiitMitt
w-riitv/^*Hy,
l^C"
I
U
beside
their
machines
like
troops
Chicago,
Detroit
and
st.
LOUI$.
praise
for
Soviel
Russia.
Thai
was
in
1925.
When
I
got
back
to
New
York,
I
tried
to
interest
various
editors
and
my
news
syndicate
in
a
series
of
articles
on
the
menace
of
Communism
in
China.
Only
one
paper,
Ihe
New
York
American,
printed
the!
story.
l£
1963,
Bell
Syndicate,
Inc.)
GOLD
ST1UKK
NiDWALDEN,
Swiuerl
and
(ffl
—
Franz
Amstutx
cut
down
a
tree
near
the
fashionable
Alpine
playground
of
Burgenstock,
and
trod
on
a
box
crammed
with
gold
pieces.
Local
police
are
trying
to
decide
who
gets
the
gold—the
far-
|uer,
the
man
who
o
w
n
s
the
ground
where
it
was
fpuncl,
or
the
original
owner,
perhaps
a
French-woman
from
Nice
who
stayed
in
Ihe
neighborhood
during
World
War
II.
Franz
isn'l
worried.
No
mailer
who
claims
the
gold,
he
still
is
enlitled
to
a
the
measure
later
died
in
the
House
Rules
Commillee.
There
is
no
question
about
the
right
of
Congress
to
legislate
under
the
clause
which
gives
it
authority
"to
regulate
interstate
commerce."
There
have
been
times
—
during
war
periods,
for
instance
—
when
Congress
has
enacted
legislation
not
only
to
control
strikes
but
also
to
fix
wages
and
prices.
But
no
such
law
exists
today.
The
labor
unions,
of
course,
operate
under
board
grants
of
authority
lo
organize
for
collective
bargaining.
The
Tail-Hartley
Act
covers
all
unions
except
those
of
the
transportation
industries,
whose
labor
relations
are
specifically
regulated
by
the
Railway
Labor
Acl
—
a
statute
which
antedates
the
Taft-Harlley
law
by
many
years.
Nothing
lu
I'rohlhit
But
nothing
in
either
law
pro
hibits
monopoly
power
among
unions
such
as
has
long
been
forbidden
in
the
case
of
businessmen
ever
since
the
Sherman
Antitrust
Law
was
passed
in
1890.
It
has
been
reaffirmed
in
many
statutes
since.
President
Kennedy's
latest
proposal
to
bolli
sides
to
let
Justice
Arthur
Goldberg
of
the
Supreme
Court
act
as
an
arbitrator
in
the
current
dispute,
while
ihc
unions
and
companies
go
on
operating,
is
in
principle
at
variance
with
the
unions'
previous
position
against
compulsory
arbitration.
They
have
felt
all
along
Uiat
arbitration
by
government
might
not
be
fair
to
them.
But
the
admin-
finder's
reward
of
up
to
50
pefcigtraUon
reasoned
that
they
could
cent
of
the
total,
which
is
3,70(7
hardly
say
tills
about
Goldberg,
francs
at
today's
values.
{
^
18u3i
N
.y.
Herald-Tribune,
inc.)
CROSSWORD
-
-
-
By
Eugene
Sbeffer
1-2
16
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55"
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33
34
too
3o
3<2>
(o
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44-
14
58
to
afe
•3.7
51.
Japanese
porgy
52.
nocturnal
bird
55,
lubricate
56.
absorb
knowledge
58.
letter
of
the
alphabet
59.
female
parent
60.
expunge
61.
conclude
HORIZONTAL
47.
pitcher
1.
dress
48.
a
creed
o
moment
4.
yawns
9.
Tibetan
gazelle
12.
Arabian
garment
13.
body
of
Moslem
scholars
14.
append
15.
insect
egg
16.
corded
fabric
17.
theater
seats
19.
rim
21.
a
fold
32,
the
black
nightshade
24,
stillness
28,
correlative
of
either
29,
cozy
places
31.
gaseous
element
32.
female
ruff
34.
insipid
36.
high
explosive
87.
identical
39.
deputy
1,
proscribe
2.
Japanese
sash
3.
irrigate
4.
flows
in
a
noisy
current
5.
to
the
sheltered
side
6.
vigor
7.
printer's
measure
8.
Pacific
Coast
shrub
9.
a
joke
10.
poem
7-10
11.
paid
notices
18.
unclosed
20.
lair
21.
sewing
thread
22.
American
inventor
23.
mountain
nymph.
24.
a
phase>
25.
seine
26.
a
short
story
27.
go
in
30.
declare
33.
Australian
bird
35.
interlace
41,
symbol
for
tellurium
42.
instruct
44.
sot
46.
consumed
Answer
to
yesterday's
puzzle.
35.
modified
plant
specie*
40.
pedal
digit
43.
gruel
of
maize
meal
45,
to
test
47.
auditory
organs
48.
food
fisb
40.
narro\v
inlet
60.
shade
treo
61.
Chinese
pagoda
63.
skin
tumor
54.
guided
57.
symbol
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1863.
Kin*
Fe«tur«j
gyod.,
Inc.)
BJUNVPJG
Tenterdoy*
Cryptoqulp;
ABB
STILL
A-DITtfEK
IN
,
W
QAT
JUNE
QRAPUATii
rying
vital
supplies
of
oil,
kerosene
and
aviation
gasoline
to
Soviet
and
Castro
military
forces.
Both
of
these
official
reports
also
reveal
the
disturbing
tact
that
in
the
past
three
months
an
increasing
number
of
ships
flying
free-world
flags
have
been
showing
up
in
Cuban
ports,
under
contract
to
Soviet
bloc
countries.
cy
advisers
is
privately
pursuing;
Most
of
these
ships
(39
in
Apan
exactly
opposite
course.
Without
a
single
protest,
these
White
House
authorities
are
permitting
la
r
g
e
quantities
of
oil
from
Western
and
Communist
ril,
42
in
May
and
53
in
June)
arc
of
British
registry,
although
many
actually
are
owned
by
nationals
of
Greece,
lta,ly
and
Norway.
The
Oil
Truffle
countries
to
flow
into
Cuba
to
I
O
f
the
Western
ships
plying
the
keep
Castro's
sagging
economy
operating
and
his
Soviet-equipped
and
dominated
military
machine
running.
The
President's
assistants
are
even
proceeding
with
a
closely-
guarded
plan
to
resume
diplomatic
relations
with
Castro
by
sending
a
charge
d'affaires
to
Havana.
The
carefully-masked
lace
of
the
administration's
Cuban
policy
is
clearly
reflected
in
Navy
reports
on
the
steadily
increasing
volume
of
Western
and
Communist
shipping
to
Cuba,
surveys
by
the
Maritime
Administrate]!,
and
highly
significant
discussions
amo.ng
top
administration
officials.
Naval
Intelligence's
latest
reports
disclose
that
429
Russian-
satellite
and
205
Western
vessels
arrived
in
Cuba
in
the
first
six
months
of
1363.
The
Maritime
Administration
which
lacks
certain
clandestine
information
available
to
the
Navy,
states
that
"at
least
167
free-world
ships
docked
in
Cuba
since
January
1,
1963."
According
to
the
Navy's
unpublished
estimate,
96
of
the
Russian-
satellite
vessels
were
tankers
car-
was
appropriated
for
other
purposes.
L.
U.
CRADD1CK,
808
Herbert
SI.
Cuban
trade,
21
are
tankers,
13
of
them
flying
the
British
flag.
Three
other
tankers
are
Greek,
three
Norwegian
and
two
Italian.
In
overall
tonnage,
these
tankers
represent
nearly
one-fourth
of
the
1,031,517
tons
of
Western
shipping
now
serving
Cuba.
These
Western
tankers
averaged
two
trips
to
Cuba
in
the
first
six
months,
according
to
the
Navy,
indicating
the
vessels
are
regularly
assigned
to
transporting
Western
oil
there.
As
administration
policy
is
lo
blacklist
only
individual
ships
and
Today
9
s
Prayer
Once
again,
almighty
God,
we
thank
Thee
for
a
new
day.
Help
us,
we
pray
to
greet
it
with
holy
enthusiasm.
Give
us
the
grace
ever
lo
be
alert
lo
Hie
countless
opportunities
it
may
afford
to
do
Thy
will.
Reveal
to
us
the
value
of
this
hour
and
the
work
it
may
represent.
Throughout
this
day,
Lord
God,
help
us
lo
be
failhful
lo
Thee
in
the
minulcsl
details
of
our
work,
thai
il
may
be
done
as
unto
Thee;
in
Jesus'
name.
Amen.
—Mae
E.
Hunter,
Nashville,
Tenn.,
missionary
editor,
National
Baptist
Publishing
Board,
(tgi
10C3
by
the
Division
of
Christian
Education,
National
Council
of
the
Churches
of
Christ
in
the
U.
S,
A.)
not
the
entire
fleet
of
an
owner,
these
foreign
operators
find
il
highly
profitable
—
and
safe
—
to
assign
certain
vessels
to
the
Cuban
trade.
This
glaring
loophole
makes
utterly
meaningless
-the
loudly
ballyhooed
blacklist,
",
the.
only
concrete
measure
so
far
taken
lo
curb
Western
shipping.
Repeated
efforts
by
congressional
leaders
to
pul
teeth
into
the
administration's
shipping
blacklist
have
been
disregarded
by
the
President,
and^iis
'policy,
advisers.
They
claim-'
stiffer
measures
would
lead
to•:
vehement
objections
by
U.
S.
allies,
particularly
Britain.
"
•
Signifieurilly,
these
potent'White
House
Jieutenants
are
suppressing
a
Defense
Intelligence
"Agency
report
indicating
that
considerable
quantities
of
:
strategic
lubricating
oil,
processed
In
the
.U.S.
and
used
in
ground-to-air
missile
systems
have
turned
up
in
Cuba
after
being
trans-shipped
from
another
country.
This
same
report
also
reveals
thai
Venezuelan
oil
is
finding
its
way
to
Cuba
by
trans-shipment
through
European
and
,
Latin
American
firms.
Shifting
Policy
As
reported
in
this
column
on
June
19,
President
Kennedy
is
seriously
considering'
;
a
Slale
Department
proposal
to
resume
diplomatic
ties
with
Cas'trq.
As
a
firsl-ste'ty
the.,President
is
contemplating
reopening
the
U.S.
embassy
in
Havana
by
sending
a
charge
d'affaires
.there.
Under
the
plan,
this
would
take
place
in
September.
At
present,
the
Swiss
are
handling
-U,S,
affairs
in
Cuba.
The
closely-guarded
move
to
"normalize"
relations
-with
Communist
puppet
Dictator
Castro
is
linked
directly
with
the
President's
elaborate
maneuvers
to
ease
tensions
with
Russia.
«0
1903.
The
Mall
Syndicate,
Inc.)
MIRROR
OF
YOUR
MIND
By
JOSEPH
WHITNEY
good,
too.
Just
sitting
and
talking
about
the
pitfalls
of
present-day
life
may
have
some
healthy
and
constructive
aspects,
at;
least
for
the
critical,
Since
overly-critical
persons
rarely
have
any
sound,
well-thought-out
ideas
about
correcting
or
helping
Ihe
conditions
they
deplore,
it
may
be
better
all
around
tor
them
to
displace
their
anger
and
intolerance
in
mere
talk,
instead
of
in
intolerant
acls.
Is
procrastination
a
form
of
laziness?
Answer:
The
tendency
to
put
things
off
from
day
lo
day
is
more
likely
a
product
of
frustration.
Some
people
expend
more
energy
avoiding
a
tusk
than
they
would
use
up
in
taking
on
and
finishing
the
project
they
keep
putting
off.
At
times
most
of
us
feel
this
tendency,
and
tliiiik
up
ingenious
ways
lo
avoid
the
responsibility,
ProcraslinaUurt
is
resorted
to
because
we
can
ration'
Are
today's
young
putinle
Should
you
believe
only
what
yew
see?
Answer:
No,
only
a
weak,
un»
Informed
mind
eowld,
dp
that,
since
no
one
person
can
see
nwe
than
M
mere
fra«ilon
pf
what
goes
on
about
Him.
There
are
a
lew
self-sufficient
people
who
claim
to
believe
only
what
they
see,
but
they
are
unconsciously
protecting
themselves
against
tear
ot
any*
Probably
no
wore
so
t
h
|
;
n
'g
ihey
ean»pt
understand,
alize
that
other
things
need
doing,
than
past
generations
of
ieen-ag-
They
are
afraid
lo
understand
the
thai
tomorrow
will
he
a
tetter
ers,
It
m»y
have
some
harmful
el-
world
putside
MieU
1
pbysicttJ
fi
time.
fcclf
but
It
'probably
"dsei
:iome
•••
v
-
^'-^'^••-:^
dO
11)03,
King
Features,
Synd.,
inc.)